Carol Catalano

Products by Carol Catalano

Capelli StoolCarol Catalano

When Carol Catalano was seven years old, she spent six weeks in bed with rheumatic fever. “To keep me from being bored, my dad gave me several books on drawing,” she recalls, “and they opened a whole new world for me. That’s when I decided I wanted to do something creative in my life.”

Her creative interest found a focus when she entered the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) after high school and discovered industrial design. “After the first project, I knew I had found my life’s work,” she says.

Catalano says the training she received at RISD added a whole new dimension to her creativity. “They had a very hands-on approach, so I worked a lot with materials in the machine and wood shops.” In fact, that hands-on training proved valuable when she was working on her Capelli stool. “One of the requirements for the International Furniture Design Competition in Asahikawa (Japan) was to build a full-size prototype,” says Catalano, “which we did—in my garage.”

The effort paid off: Her stool took a Silver Prize in the prestigious competition in 1999—one of only eight awards given and the only American design selected from over 700 entries from around the world.

Catalano has applied her creative talents to a wide variety of products since founding her business in 1987; current design projects range from “gig” bags for toting musical instruments to high-end audio speakers and other consumer electronics.

She finds learning about new industries one of the most challenging and rewarding aspects of her job. “I love giving artistic expression to things I’ve learned,” she says, “and I’m always looking for ways to ‘cross-pollinate.’ Just the other day, for example, I was meeting with a thermoplastics supplier, and he was showing me the elastomer pellets in their raw state before they’re melted down and injection molded. My immediate reaction was to think, how can we use these pellets in other applications?”

Catalano likes to push the current boundaries of her field and has made a commitment to include much more thinking about the end user’s experience in all her designs. “It’s much different now than when I first started out,” she says. “It used to be about just creating a good design. Now the first thing I think about in any project is how I can simplify and enrich people’s lives.”

With the energy and enthusiasm she shows for her work, it’s clear Catalano loves the career path she’s chosen. In her time away from the office, she and her husband, an architect, enjoy windsurfing on a little island off the coast of Venezuela and spending family time with their twins.